What a bunch of nonsense. Class D is at the hi-fi stage. Lofi and midfi are stupid descriptions based on price point.
The term"hi fi" was coined in the 1950s. It was generally agreed that so-called products were capable to reproducing sound in the 50-15kHz range.
But time as moved on. Now, hi-fi is generally understood to mean systems capable of producing good quality sound across the entire human hearing range. There is much ambiguity concerning what constitutes quality sound. Regardless, the prefixes hi-, mid-, and lo- have never been based on component price. Instead, equally ambiguous terms like the detested "audiophile grade" are used to equate price to performance.
This is something I reject. Indeed, I have posted elsewhere that I cannot see any real correlation between price and performance.
Elsewhere I posted a link to an EE Times (professional electrical engineer's journal) article calling for better ways to measure distortion in Class D amps. The author, himself and engineer of Class D amplifiers, raised concerns about significant non-linearity.
Elsewhere in this thread, mention has been made of brick wall filters being used to limit frequency (and distortion) of certain Class D amps above 20kHz. I take a rather benign view of this, largely due to a general ambivalence to whatever goes on in a gain circuit outside the audible range.
Regardless, I cannot ignore the non-linearity issue inherent to Class D topologies. I can see where some manufacturers might employ DSP to help mitigate non-linearity, but I don't think the reliance of DSP is a very good sign of excellence in gain. It's a crutch.
Now the use of DSP and Class D amplifification in subwoofers is quite common -- and it clearly works. But a subwoofer is not a hi-fi device. Subwoofers only operate over a very narrow frequency band. Their levels of distortion are notoriously high -- sometimes 15% or more.
So I don't see it as a big deal to use Class D amps for subs... or for laptops, tablets, and cell phones due to these devices' limited need for high fidelity. But I, like the Class D amp engineer authoring the EE Times article, see serious issues elsewhere. These might preclude them from serious consideration in some applications.
I have no doubt that these issues WILL get resolved, just as other issues such as switching noise were resolved to a manageable level in Class AB amps. But we're not there yet.